Hugh Jackman slashes his way back in ‘Wolverine’

LOS ANGELES, (Reuters) – Hugh Jackman on Friday  slashes his way back to his starmaking role as a razor-clawed  mutant in “X-Men Origins: Wolverine” after his glitzy turn  hosting the Oscars and starring in romance “Australia” that  flopped at U.S. box offices.

The change is good for the Aussie star because of the  exposure it brings, but despite the box office appeal of the  “X-Men” movies, Jackman said these days he leans more toward  starring on Broadway, where he won a Tony.

It’s Jackman’s fourth turn as tough-talking Wolverine, a  role he won in the 2000 film “X-Men,” fresh from starring in a  London stage production of the musical “Oklahoma!”

“There’s no doubt that as soon as this movie came out, that  my career was like a Great Dane dragging me down the street,”  Jackman told Reuters about the last nine years of his career.

The 2000 “X-Men” made $296 million at worldwide box offices  and helped usher in the latest wave of comic book movies. The  2003 “X2” topped that with $408 million, and the 2006 “X-Men:  The Last Stand” burst past it at $459 million.

Paul Dergarabedian, president of box office tracker Media  by Numbers reckons “X-Men Origins: Wolverine” could fetch from  $85 million to $100 million at U.S. box offices on its debut  weekend — the first weekend of Hollywood’s summer season.

Jackman, 40, said playing Wolverine has been a challenge  because of the “sustained energy” he needs while shooting.

“Underneath you’ve got to feel he’s ready to explode all  the time,” he said of the character. True to its title, “X-Men Origins: Wolverine” focuses on  the early years of Jackman’s character, leaping back to his  childhood discovery of claws that spring from his knuckles.

The film introduces moviegoers to the Wolverine that comic  book readers know best, when the U.S. government grafts the  indestructible metal Adamantium onto his skeleton giving him  the razor sharp weapons he wields naturally from his arms. Wolverine believes his brother Sabertooth killed  Wolverine’s girlfriend and vows to hunt him down. But along the  way, he gets caught in a secret U.S. program and eventually  faces a twisted enemy to super-powered mutants like himself.

Jackman said that to get in shape for the movie, he worked  out, drank protein shakes and ate meat at every meal, chowing  down every three hours and waking up at 3:30 a.m. for more.

He did all that during the shoot for 2008 epic “Australia,”  which got director Baz Luhrmann worried as his star actor  started looked bulkier from one scene to the next. “Baz came to me and said, ‘Mate, I need you to kind of back  off a little bit. I’m struggling to edit the movie,’“ Jackman  said with a chuckle, chewing on a toothpick.